102 Irt 1 ';4':" t ;J " ::1 5 1 f' "t: . ' : - -= I i I ,Þ #' - ----: = , - \ - .1\ Scollðnò ðf\d 8ottl.d "'lit IC,nqòom .."de, <.ov 'n"""t CUTTY SARK -6 SC BlENDEDrN OTS WHISI\I 1001. Seotch Whisk.eS ..... Sc.t.. N.t lh'tt/lenff ð6,1CIDf 4lS , .. .otl " at _. tit .. II "''''"'',, yttl .... B -'N "'..c.. J,f E y BltOf & 3 ..-;:: ;:: __ø BLENDED SCOTS WHISKY 86 PlOOF .....- ,.,.--...::- lIP"" IOI.t stUIll(. _ms - "" .... O ST"' (5 Of - --- IMPOITED IY THE IUCICINGHAM COIPOIATION 10CKEfELLEI CENTEI NEW YOlK The Size- The Sound- The Power-Halts gives the tady her own fuJI-performance six- transistor radio In our exclu.. sive hand-beaded case. No larger than her cigarette case White with pastel accents. Ours alone in the United States. SIX transistors, earphone, nine-volt standard battery, complete weight six ounces. Includes a leather case for him (when borrowing her radio). 39.95. By phone or mail if you wish. Add 1 00 mailing. Christmas wrap, 50. -tt Halls 1114 grand avenue kansas city, missouri '. ,} .. :'Js":-,,,"- * "-- . ".:: . ,,* '"* 'w<< .jjj ;:""-6 ../ . '.W:, :t.. ' ^ : # 4 :t * : ".N' .... ..... ....:;.. . , -H. DECEMDEI\ 1 2., 1 9 5 9 that the tutor has become too friendly with their daughter; secretly glad to be nd of the intruder, Mr. Harrington fires him, but his action ramifies in ways he could never have predIcted. HIs son protests against the dismissal with a pas- sion that has unmistakably homosexual overtones. The German, meanwhile, attempts suicide. All the pieces of the puzzle interlock snugly and without strain, falling into place with a splendid, steely inevitabil- ity. Seeking comparisons, one's mind turns to SWISS watches or chess prob- lems-especially the latter, since the contending forces in "Five FInger Ex- ercise" take a long time to get to grips and the tension mounts very slowly. You wiH certainly be held, you may even be mesmerized, but you are not likely to be moved. The writing, expert though it IS, has about it a curious blood- lessness, as you will see if you compare Mr. Shaffer's work with "A Month in the Country," which also deals with the jealousy that overcomes a rural chate- laine when she fails to attract the affec- tions of a hired tutor. Where Turgenev sprawls and smiles, Mr. Shaffer is tight- lipped and technical, constantly building up emotional climaxes that he lacks the verbal felicity to fulfill. The effect re- minds one of a mountain range with all the peaks lopped off, or of a masterpiece of functional architecture from which the central heating has been inexplica- bly omitted. Despite these objections, "Five Finger Exercise" is the most ac- complished new play Broadway has seen this wretched season. The acting, su- pervised by Sir] ohn Gielgud, is superbly adroit. Father is Roland Culver, his face swagged in surly folds, with a monocle of wrinkles around each beady eye; as Mrs. Harrington, Jessica Tandy hits the right note of frayed edginess; and] uliet Mills, who plays the daugh- ter, is a model of chuhhy common sense. Even so, the boys come off best. Brian Bedford, as the son, steers hIs way through a part that is full of sarcasm and complaint without once sneering or whining, and Michael Bryant, as the tutor, gives a performance of the most audacious subtlety, speaking English in an accent so pure that it at once estab- lishes him as a German. Among many other vIrtues, Mr. Bryant has the most authentic stammer I have ever heard on the stage. " S ILENT NIGHT, LONELY NIGHT," by Robert Anderson, is a wurd} study of two sleepless peuple, by dawn's early light, who are prepared to gu tu any lengths to avoid saying goud night.